Photography Pricing Calculator

Photographers often undervalue editing time and equipment costs. Price sessions to cover gear depreciation, software subscriptions, and your professional expertise.

Product Pricing & Profit Calculator

Optimize your pricing strategy with AI-powered insights

Pricing Strategy

Enter your shop name for a personalized PDF report with your business name.

How many items do you expect to sell each month?

πŸ’‘ Why needed? Fixed costs (Rent/Labor) must be split by each item. Lower sales = Higher cost per item. We need this to calculate your min break-even price.

Percentage of items that are wasted or unsold.

βœ… Price is above break-even $18.35. You are making profit!

How much will you charge for one item?

Financial Report

Net Profit

$3325

per month

Margin

26.6%

profit margin

Break-Even

312

units/month

Cost Breakdown

Margin Analysis

βœ“ Margin Detected: Your 26.6% profit margin is healthy for the cafe industry. You need to sell 312 units to break even, currently projecting 500 units.

Promotion Profit Simulator
Avoid loss-making promotions

Current Pricing

Original Price:$25.00
Monthly Volume:500 units
Monthly Profit:$8825

Promotion Scenario

Discounted Price:$22.50
New Monthly Volume:650 units
New Monthly Profit:$9847
Profit Change:+$1022 (+11.6%)

πŸ“Š Break-Even Analysis

Required Volume Growth β‰₯17% to break even

Current Expectation: 30% βœ…

Photography Pricing Benchmarks

Photography is priced by session or package, not by the few cents of storage a shoot uses. Your real costs are gear depreciation, software subscriptions, and the editing hours that often double the time of the shoot itself. Portrait sessions commonly run $150–500 and weddings $2,000–5,000+; price so that billable shooting plus editing covers a sustainable hourly rate.

$150–500
Portrait session
$2,000–5,000+
Wedding package
1–2Γ— shoot time
Edit time
ongoing overhead
Gear + software
~60% of work time
Billable hours

Common Pricing Mistakes

Not charging for editing time

Culling and retouching can take as long as the shoot. Pricing only the shooting hours leaves half your work unpaid.

Ignoring gear depreciation

Bodies, lenses and computers wear out and need replacing. A slice of every session should fund that, or you can't re-invest.

Pricing on shoot hours only

Travel, communication, backup and delivery are unbilled time. Only ~60% of your work hours are billable, so rates must reflect that.

Underpricing usage and prints

Commercial usage rights and physical prints carry extra value. Bundling them free leaves money on the table.

Tools to Run Your Business

Once your pricing works, these are the tools small operators use to take payments, keep books, and market.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much should I charge for a photography session?

Portrait sessions commonly run $150–500 depending on market and deliverables. Back into your rate from target income, then divide by realistic billable hours β€” only about 60% of your time is shooting. The calculator above helps.

How do I price editing time?

Treat editing as billable. If a shoot is two hours and editing is two to four, your package price must cover all of it β€” not just the time behind the camera.

Why should I factor in gear costs?

Cameras, lenses and editing computers depreciate and need replacing every few years. Funding that from each session is what keeps your business able to re-invest instead of falling behind.

Should I charge more for commercial work?

Yes. Commercial usage rights have value beyond your time, so license fees apply on top of the shoot rate. The same photo for a billboard is worth far more than for a personal print.

How do I set a wedding photography price?

Weddings run $2,000–5,000+ because they bundle a full day of shooting, many hours of editing, and delivery. Price the total hours plus gear and second-shooter costs, not a day rate alone.

How to Use This Photography Calculator

  1. Enter your monthly sales volume: How many items do you expect to sell per month?
  2. Add your fixed costs: Include rent, equipment, utilities, insurance, and any other expenses that don't change with sales volume.
  3. List variable costs per item: Raw materials, packaging, direct labor, and merchant fees.
  4. Set your waste/loss rate: Be realistic about spoilage, breakage, or defects.
  5. Adjust the selling price: Watch how your profit margin changes in real-time.

Why Traditional Pricing Methods Fail

Many small business owners use the "3x material cost" rule or simply match competitor prices. The problem? This ignores your unique cost structure. Your rent might be higher, your waste rate different, or your labor costs vary by location. This calculator reveals your true break-even point and ensures sustainable pricing.

Free Professional PDF Report

Download a clean, shareable PDF of your pricing breakdown β€” cost structure, break-even point, and profit scenarios β€” completely free, with no sign-up. Useful for partners, lenders, or your own records.